Sunday, September 26, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine TH E MCIA AL aeN 'M' defE By RICK CORNFELD UCLA head football c o a c h Pepper Rodgers ("I've never been dominated by a team so much as today") knew better than to mess around with Michigan's de- fense. So the first time his Bruins had posses- sion of the ball in Michigan Stadium yes- terady, they ran two plays and then made the prudent decision to punt. "What did you want me to do?" he asked, after the game. "We had third down and 12 on the six. What were we supposed to do?" Rodgers had seen films of the Wolverine defense and he was impressed, but not so much as he was when he actually saw it play. "To me they looked better physi- cally than Texas in the films," Rodgers said. "Then today they just dominated our offense." Dominated may be understating the case. Allowing just 216 total yards-all but 61 of them in the fourth quarter when the game was wrapped up - Michigan notched its second straight shutout. If it hadn't been for a questionable interfer- ence call on Tom Darden against North- western, it might be three. Setting the pace was the defensive line, which gave up only 39 yards on the ground and subjected Bruin quarterback Mike Anse impresses Flores to an incredible pass rush. Flores was dumped seven times while attempting to pass for a total loss of 57 yards and was harrassed in his own back- field so much on other times that he threw wildly. The junior college transfer, who was billed as a good passer, completed 14 passes for 177 yards, but the Bruin pass- ing game was not really that effective be- cause of the number of times Flores couldn't even get the pass off. Michigan coach Bo Schembechler seem- ed to cover the subject pretty thoroughly when he said of the defense, "They've been playing very well. They can play the pass; they can play the run; and (chuckle) they can blitz." Defensive end Butch Carpenter, who led the way by chasing Flores around the backfield on UCLA's first pass at- tempt until he finally threw in despera- tion to the arms of surprised Michigan lineman Dave Gallagher, said, "We all had a good day today, especially (tackle) Tom Beckman. Tom was really in (the UCLA backfield) all the time. By the end of the season, I think he'll be recog- nized as one of the best around." Beckman explained that one of the rea- sons the pass rush was so effective is that Flores is strictly a passing quarterback. "When they pass," he said, "there's no holds barred. You know they're just going to pass and not try to run it out of there." Flores, who Rodgers admitted is not much of a runner, showed himself to be resourceful-though not resourceful enough - by scrambling away from onrushing lineman on a number of plays.' "I remember one play," said Gallagher, "when Beckman rushed in and I followed' and we both got to Flores. but somehow he got away. He would get out with his quickness, but he would only run laterally, not forward." UCLA's offensive line did not object to much to the Wolverines' activities. "Their tackles just blocked one on one," said middle guard Greg Ellis, "so it was easy for us to get around them. Also, they couldn't handle our angle forma- tions." The Wolverines worked hard in practice last week because they felt they had something to prove and they think they have gone a long way toward proving it. ."We were ready for this game," was the usual understatementfrom Schembechler, whose teams presumably are ready for every game, but many of the players felt yesterday's game was more important than the normal non-conference contest. "We always get ready when we're play- Pepper ing a Pac 8 team," said defensive stand- out Mike Taylor. "Some people think the Big Ten can't compete with Pac 8 teams. I feel we can. Lots of people feel we hadn't played anybody when we played Northwestern and Virginia. This was like our test." Ellis, in fact, considered the game a personal test for the defensive line. "We knew we wanted to find out how good we really are," he said. Well, how good did Ellis think he and his buddies were? "We feel we can hold our own with anybody in the country," he said, modestly. The reason Ellis' statement is so modest is that Rodgers, whose team played Texas last week, said, "Today, they (Michigan) were better than Texas the way they moved the ball-especially, defensively." Texas is merely the third-ranked team in the country. When a team wins a game 38-0, many people- look at the offense first, but in Michigan's case, the defense has sparked the club this year. "Our defense is great, outasight-every one of them," said tail- back Billy Taylor. Carpenter returned the compliment, say- ing, "People don't realize that we've got so much power offensively that it helps the defense." -Daily-Jim Wallace WOLVERINE SAFETYMAN Tom Darden (35) races down the sideline with a pass interception in yesterday's 38-0 rout of UCLA. Darden intercepted a Mike Flores pass on the Michigan 8-yard line stopping a Bruin drive and ran it back all the way for a fourth period Wolverine touchdown. o ernes breeze SUNDAY SPORTS the line with only one thought in mind. No doubt realizing the evil deeds Carpenter was about to per- petrate on him, Flores dumped off a quick safety valve right into the hands of Michigan defensive tackle Dave Gallagher who scampered three yards to the 18. Afte~r a niftyv 12 yard aerial from Bruins i out to lunch mort noveck By JIM KEVRA Michigan, with its offense capitalizing on n u m e r o u s UCLA mistakes, and its de- fense putting together another !superb 60 -minute effort, smashed its way to a 38-0 It wasn't .. .f h . he expected YESTERDAY'S football game with the UCLA Bruins didn't live up to its billing as a tough intersectional clash, but if anyone cares they gmust be from Los Angeles. Certainly none of the local residents were disappointed. After Virginia the fans expected the Wolverines to blow anyone who dared to enter out of the stadium. The players wanted to beat UCLA convincingly and even Michigan coach Bo Schem- bechler has never been heard to complain about winning. He did insist though, that he didn't expect it to be as easy as it was. "I just don't think that we're 38 points better than UCLA." he maintained. "I though that we'd go into the fourth quarter struggling for a win, but we got some breaks early and took advantage of them." Schembechler spent the week before the contest mat- tering that the Bruins should have beaten Texas and that they were big and tough. He kept claiming that Michigan would be lucky to win by one point, but no one seemed to believe him, including his own players. The squad came out ready to win big and none were more prepared than tailback Bill Taylor. "We wanted to let them know where we were coming from," he said. "We want people to recog- nize Michigan. This is one of the best teams we'll play and we physically beat them." Taylor wasted little time in introducing himself to the Bruins as he carried the ball on the first six Michigan plays from scrimmage. In the first five he was devastatingly effective on the sweep. It could be argued that Taylor had gained a step in speed by shaving his mustache off Friday night, but he attributes his success to more technical considerations. "It just happened that UCLA was in a defense where I could be effective carrying the ball," he explained. "Everything was just right so they gave me the ball and I got some yards." The Bruins made some adjustments in the second half and held Taylor in check, but it wasn't his fault. "They were keying on me more, and every time we started on the sweep they were ready." It wasn't hard for UCLA to ready themselves for Taylor in the second half as they saw little other than running backs punching into the line. After playing a slightly more free- wheeling style than normal in the first half, Schembechler returned to his usual conservative brand of football in the second. Quarterback Kevin Casey, who went to the air nine times in the opening half, threw the ball only twice in the second. All six of his completions came in the first half, and this newly found passing attack helped keep the Bruins off balance. In the final periods Schembechler had him keep it on the ground so UCLA was ready to crunch the running backs coming through. It wasn't that Bo suddenly lost confidence in Casey, in fact he called his first half performance excellent, but that with a 24-0 lead he didn't want to do anything-that could give UCLA a break. "We purposely made the second half slower," he explained. I'm not going to take chances in my own territory when I'm 24 ahead. For what we wanted to do we didn't play a bad second half. We just don't throw the ball and do fancy stuff wher we're ahead." Passing is supposed to be harder when it's raining, but all of Casey's successful aerials came before the precipitation stopped. "I think that the receiver actually has an advantage when it's wet," Schembechler claimed. "He knows where te ball's going so the slippery footing is harder on the defensive backs. I don't think that the weather affected our passing at all." If the weather didn't affect the Michigan game, it could also be said that neither did the Bruins. For a time it seemed that yesterday's yame was a replay of the Virginia affair as the Wolverines took command at the beginning. But UCLA came back and fought, at least physically. "They got in some good licks," Schembechler noted. "Rather got hit good and Coyle got a hip pointer." Wolfman Frank Gus- ich also suffered a minor hip injury and Taylor had his leg victory over the Bruins yester- NIGHT EDITORS: RANDY PHILLIPS and AL SHACKELFORD Kevin Casey to Glenn Doughty, Ed day despite a day long drizzle Shuttlesworth squirmed the final and slippery Tartan Turf. yard to push the Michigan lead to The Wolverines came out hitting, 14-0. On looking only at the sta- both on offense and defense, and early, and we put it in the end- the deep man on UCLA's punt re- tistics, one would believe that put 17 big points on the scoreboard zone." turn team, called for a fair catch, Doughty is having a rather poor during the first quarter, then play- The Bruins' freshman head and then tried to run with the foot- year. In three games, he has rush- ed semi-conservative football the coach, Pepper Rodgers also had ball. The result was a half the ed a meager 35 yards and caught rest of the way to rack up their high praise for the Wolverines. distance to the goal penalty against three passes. third consecutive victory and their "On this day they were better the Bruins which pushed them But, quite possibly, Doughty is seccnd shutout in a row than Texas (who beat UCLA last back iside their owvn five, the most important part of the The defense played theiirusual week, 28-10), especially defensive- Stuck near the Bruin goal line, Wolverine offense. Last week, he "ofte deningseld beaking ly. We were stymied on offense Rodgers decided to punt after two was voted the "Champion of the often bending, seldom breaking and were lucky to get anything cracks at the Michigan front four shutout by holding the Bruinsat at all. They are very good and proved ineffective. Tom Daden More sports Page 7 bay from the two yard line in the very talented. We've never been started the Wolverines on their waigrcns Dn on h dominated like that." way to victory by lugging the' waning Seconds. Dana Cin, who dMintok the leather back 22 yards to the Bruin Week" on offense for his superb skillfully split the uprights with Michigan took the opeimng kick- 20 blocking. This week, the senior five extra points and a field goal,i off (the third straight time) and From there, it was only a mat- speedster added a new dimension made the key defensive play from it looked like the Virginia game ter of time until fullback Fritz to his game with his dynamic punt his linebacker position as he bat- all over again as Michigan cranked Seyferth blasted in from the six- coverage. ted down UCLA quarterback Mike out three straight first downs, inch line while carrying four Bruins On almost every punt, either Flores' pass on the last play of the mostly on the quick, Jimmy Brown ion his back. Doughty or tight end Tom Seal game to leave the Michigan goal legs of Billy Taylor. But the Bruin T line untrammeled. defense proved to be more potent lean back in their seats and take safetymen. The Bruins were able Head coach Bo Schem~bechler than that of the hapless Cavaliers a good chug of Boone's Farm after to return only five of eight punts was concise in his post game an and held Michigan at the Bruin 37, Coin's kickoff before the offense for a grand total of 22 yards, cer- alysis. Schembechler said, "We got forcing a punt. was back on the field. tainly a factor in the outcome of some breaks early, and we took Then, in another one of those Flores had dropped back to pass the game. advantage of them. We played a plays that make the referees reach on third and six when defensive Linebacker Mike Taylor supplied good first half, we moved the ball for their rulebooks, Ron Carver, end Butch Carpenter broke through the next Wolverine break as he rZins brui ted played his favorite game, "Sepa- rate the Ballcarrier from the Foot- ball," on J Bruin halfback Marv Mich. UCLA SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 F PUNTING Kendricks. When Michigan bogged FIRST DOWNS 15 12 UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 No Yds Avg Long down, Coin put his toe into a 31- Rushing 11 4 UCLA yard field goal to make the score Casey rolls out Passing Penalty RUSHING2 Number of rushes Yards gained rushing 2 Yards lost rushing PASSING Attempted Completed Intercepted by Yards interceptions returned TOTAL PLAYS TOTAL YARDS GAINED 2 KICK RETURN YARDAGE Punt Returns, number Punt returns, yards Kickoff returns, number Kickoff returns, yards PUNTS Number of punts Average yards Had blocked FUMBLES Fumbles lost PENALTIES Yards Penalized 8 1 214 58 246 32 10 6 2 95 698 284 56 56 41 1 39 :39 104 65 177 27 14 0 0 66 216 127 127 22 6 105 Casey Doughty Taylor Seyferth Shuttlesworth Banks Thornbladh Slade Gustafson Walker TOTALS Casey MICHIGAN Rushing Att Gain1 2 9 2 12 23 112 6 18 14 53 1 3 :3 6 2 7 1 1 2 25 58 246 Loss 10 0 21 0 0 1 0 0 0 V2 Net -1 12 91 18 53 3 7 11 25 214 TD Flores Kendricks Tyler 0 Johnson 0 Campbell 1 Mancini 1 TOTALS 1 0 0 Flores 0 0 3 Rushing 17-0 at the end of the first quarter. Att Gain Loss Net TD Unfortunately, as the second 8 0 -59 -59 01 7 15 1 14 0 quarter got under way, the Wol- 9 21 1 20 0Overine offense proved to be the 9 50 3 47 0 antithesis of its first quarter self. 3 12 1 Once crisp blocks suddenly be- 39 104 65 39 0 came soggy, sharp cuts rounded, PASSING and lucky breaks failed to mate- Att Com Int Yds TD rialize. 27 14 2 177 0 RECEIVING Until midway in the second quar- No YDS TD ter, Michigan was able to put to- 3 30 gether only one sustained drive. 3 56 0 And even that drive sputtered and 1 8 0}stuttered, until Casey hit Bo Rath- 1 6 0 er with a sideline pass which 1 25 0 Rather broke for 32 yards and a 21 0 touchdown. 1 12 0 Michigan's rock hard defensive 14 17.7 0 line and its hard working defen- No Yds Avg Long sive backs were the key to the 9 38 39.8 56 first half, however, as they held the highly regarded Bruins to 381 total yards, 47 in the air, and -9 on the ground. The third quarter proved to be a battle of the punters as each team kicked the ball four times. UCLA had a grand total of 22 net yards in that quarter while the Wolver- ines were hardly better with 30. But while Michigan's excuse was not wanting to take any chances with its lead (Michigan threw only one pass in the quarter) the Bruins offense was simply ineffective until the final minutes of the game. After the game, Schembechler defended his strategy, saying, "All they needed was for us to give them a couple of breaks and they're back in it." But it was Michigan which got the next break of the game mid- way through the final quarter when Flores, who had guided the team 62 yards in four plays to the Mich- igan 18, tried to dump the ball to a secondary receiver while fending off a Wolverine blitz. Darden picked off the ball at the eight, and, like the proverbial bat out of hell, took off down the side- lines. He cut back at the Michigan 35, and avoided the last Uclan tackler inside the 20 on his way to the second longest pass inter- ception return in Wolverine history. Darden dismissed his intercep- tion, saying "I picked up a couple of good blocks," but he was ready and willing to talk about the de- fensive squad. "This is the best defense I've ever played on," he said. "We play a conservative type of de- fense. We don't try to gamble. Our goal as a team, and as individuals too, is just to get into the Rbse Bowl." The Wolverines added their final tally with 91 seconds to go as Harry Banks, who may soon be pressing Taylor for the starting halfback job, dove in from the four after some nifty runs by Alan "Cowboy" Walker. In summation, Bo said, "UCLA's a good team. I think we're better than they are, but I don't think we're 38 points better than they are. We really got ready for this game. We really did." Looking at the final score, that seems pretty obvious. PASSING Att Com Int Yds 11 6 0 70 uayton Tyler IVernoy TD Johnson 1 Kendricks RECEIVING Cochran 8 9RCIIN Mancini 39.9 39.8 No YDS TD Campbel 0 0 Seyferth 1 5 0 Lassner 0 1 Rather 2 42 1 TOTA 0 1 Doughty 2 21 04 3 3 O Taylor 1 2 0 r 35 231 TOTALS 6 70 1! Barnes e LL LS i ,"r. :".1" ..M ..... , . . . ... ... ........................ .... A..., }:': "........ ................ .. .. . met i i SCORES i ' GRIDDE PICKINGS: Michigan 38, UCLA 0 USC 28, Illinois 0 Michigan State 31, Oregon St. 14 Baylor 10, Indiana 0 Penn State 44, Iowa 14 Washington State 31, Minnesota 20 Northwestern 12, Syracuse 6 Colorado 20, Ohio State 14 Notre Dame 8, Purdue 7 LSU 38, Wisconsin 28 Oklahoma 55, Pittsburgh 29 Boston College 40, Navy 6 Iowa State 44, New Mexico 20 Alabama 38, Florida 0 Auburn 10, Tennessee 9 Vanderbilt 49, Mississippi State 19 Texas 28, Texas Tech 0 Stanford 38, Oregon 17 Heidelberg 9, Olivet 0 Idaho 10, Colorado State 0 EAST Central Conn. St. 51, Adelphi 0 Coast Guard 26, Colby College 13 Dartmouth 31, Massachussets 7 Ithaca 8, Denison Univ. 7 Middlebury 35, Wesleyan 28 Rochester 39, Hamilton Col. 0 Springfield 42, Amherst 21 Union ColleEe 24. St. Lawrence 17 Bridgewater, Va. 20, W. Maryland 13 Ft. Valley St. 33, Fayetteville 13 Northwood Tex. 7, Austin College 6 Tulsa 21, Arkansas 20 Wm. & Mary 40, Davidson Col. 14 So. Carolina 24, No. Carolina St. 6 Rice 14, Tulane 11 Citadel 44, Boston Univ. 37 Fairmont 35, West Va. State 22 Newberry Col. 13, Catawba Col. 0 Army 16, Georgia Tech 13 Auburn 10, Tennessee 9 Marshall Univ. 15, Xavier 13 Grambling 20, Arkansas AM & N 16 MIDWEST Adrian 12, Bluffton 0 Houston 12, Cincinnati 3 Kansas St. 23, Brigham Young 7 Missouri 24, South Methodist 12 Nebraska 34, Texas A&M 7 Ohio 37, Kent State 21 Oklahoma State 24, Virginia Tech 16 Wooster 27, Albion 7 Wayne State 34, Ferris State 6 N. Michigan 37, Central Michigan 14 W. Michigan 27, N. Illinois 17 FAR WEST Wyoming 19, Air Force 13 Arizona State 41, Utah 21 California 34. San Jose State 10 ::